Translation result.Airvility CEO Jinmo Lee: $20,000 (approximately 30 million KRW) vs. $4 million (approximately 6 billion KRW). That stark price gap—between an Iranian suicide drone valued at roughly $20,000 (approximately 30 million KRW) and a U.S. Patriot missile costing about $4 million (approximately 6 billion KRW)—illustrates a growing tactical and economic mismatch in modern conflict: expensive interceptors are routinely spent to stop cheap, expendable drones. A South Korean startup founded in 2023 says it can close that gap. Airvility, launched by veterans from the Agency for Defense Development (ADD), Hyundai Motor and LG Electronics, is pitching a lower-cost, lower-risk approach to counter-drone operations. Speaking at Airvility’s research lab in Seongnam, Gyeonggi Province, Lee told Seoul Economic Daily on the 25th, “Continuing to fire expensive missiles at suicide drones drives up costs. Relying on personnel to fly inexpensive interceptors puts operators at risk during short-range engagements.” He added, “Airvility’s drone kill-chain solution addresses both safety and cost efficiency.”Among Korean startups, Airvility is unique in focusing on counter-drone systems. Its flagship airframe is the unmanned carrier AB-U60: a VTOL fixed-wing UAV with a 3 m wingspan and a 60 kg maximum takeoff weight. The AB-U60 can carry four small drones and has an operational range of roughly 30 km. “We load defensive drones onto the AB-U60, operate the carrier at stand-off distances from friendly forces, approach hostile drones and launch kinetic defensive drones to neutralize threats,” Lee said.Airvility completed an AB-U60 prototype in 2024 and plans to begin production by the end of this year. Even before mass production, the system has attracted interest from the Republic of Korea armed forces during combat trials, authorities in Abu Dhabi, and a Thai state-owned enterprise. The company plans operational proof-of-concept testing in the second half of the year.Having concentrated on airframe development to date, Airvility is now building an air‑to‑air counter-drone IT stack. The firm is developing an AI-driven command-and-control (C2) system to coordinate assets like the AB-U60. “Airvility’s C2 will fuse data from ground detection and identification sensors, classify an attacking drone’s type and threat level, and assign an appropriate countermeasure,” Lee said. “It will select mission payloads for the AB-U60 and include battle-damage-assessment capability.”Airvility aims to be South Korea’s answer to Anduril by fielding an integrated kill-chain that pairs hardware and software. “We will integrate detection and identification through engagement and post-engagement assessment,” Lee said. “Anduril reached a $60 billion (approximately 90 trillion KRW) valuation with its Lattice C2 platform; Airvility will differentiate itself with unmanned systems and C2 tailored for air-to-air operations.”Lee expects the company to generate revenue in the KRW 10 billion (approximately 7.5 million USD) range next year on the back of its counter-drone solutions. “After completing the kill chain, our long-term goal is to build heavy unmanned transport aircraft,” he said. “We’ll start as Korea’s Anduril and ultimately expand into areas Anduril hasn’t reached.”
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